The archives of the second Angevin house are no longer present in Anjou since the end of the 15th century. The Archives départementales de Maine-et-Loire and the Archives départementales de Mayenne do not have an A category (“Acts of the sovereign power and of public domain”) in their classification of the old series. Nevertheless, the administrative history of the duchy of Anjou and of the county of Maine can still be reconstructed through the documents of the Archives nationales of Paris.

The return of Anjou and Maine to the crown of France in 1480-1481 determined the fate of Angevin institutions as well as their archives. The archival transfer started in February 1485, after the abolition of the Chambre des comptes of Angers and Le Mans in the month of October 1483 by the king of France Charles VIII. Records, titles and supporting documents were then transported to Paris by several accounting officers. The rest of the archives was delivered only in 1492 and inventoried in detail in 1541 (AN, PP 33).

Documents from the archives of the duchy of Anjou are mostly found in the P series (“Chambre des comptes et comptabilités”); Angevin documents have the codes P 1334 to P 1354. The sub-categories PP (“Anciens inventaires de la Chambre des comptes”) and KK (“Monuments historiques: État des inventaires”) also contain documents of the Angevin period.

The digitization carried out by the ANR EUROPANGE program concern more than 300 documents of the PP and KK series, related to the period from 1262 to 1541. The documents that have been digitized in the P series have the codes from P 1334 to P 1343. This group includes, on the one hand, a series of titles and documents concerning the rights of the second house of Anjou in the Angevin apanage (creation of the county then duchy as an apanage, feudal reviews), but also the family's dynastic policy (wills and marriages).

There are also many practical writings, including those of the archives of the Chambre des Comptes of Angers, a register of the ducal council and another of the chancery, and a record of the expeditions of the Chambre des Comptes of Le Mans.

Finally, many acts concerning the Angevin fiscal policy have been selected, in particular those related to the movements of the ducal properties (gifts, sales, leases, annuities...), judicial affairs, exemptions and tax privileges, or even the creation of anniversary masses for the memory of the princes and princesses of the second house of Anjou.

In the KK series, 10 registers have been digitized for this program. They correspond to the accounting of the princely hôtels (Chambres aux deniers, Argenterie, Treasurer, Chapelle des chantres), from Mary of Blois to Charles of Anjou.